Tyreek Hill’s petty feud with Noah Lyles takes a new turn as Dolphins star again shines on the track

   

Take a bow, Tyreek Hill. Tyreek Hill's petty feud with Noah Lyles takes a new turn as Dolphins star  again shines on the track

Just when you thought the Miami Dolphins wide receiver's petty feud with Olympic sprinter Noah Lyles had ran out of gas, Hill found a new way this weekend to add another sub-plot to the story. The Cheetah ran another 100 meter race this weekend at the ATX Sprint Classic meet in Austin, Texas. Also participating in the same event? Noah Lyles' younger brother, Josephus. 

Hill set a new personal best time with a 10.10 second 100m run, which was good enough to place fourth in the event. 

Tyreek Hill runs a 10.10s 100m in Austin, TX

Tyreek may have been running to win, but finishing ahead of Lyles certainly seemed like a sufficient consolation price. Hill would go on to withdraw from the 100m final after logging a career-best time and defeating his rival's younger brother. 

Hill, of course, was supposed to race Noah Lyles at some point this summer. Lyles revealed earlier this month that the event had been canned, which prompted Hill to settle for defeating someone from the family instead before his moonlighting as a sprinter comes to an end and training camp opens in less than a month. 

Hill has been busy. He's ran multiple personal best 100m times on the track, he's appeared on Twitch streams and podcasts, talked a big game at Fanatics Fest and recently also promised to recruit Jalen Ramsey back into the mix with the Dolphins just this past week. 

Miami would love to see a leaner, more explosive Hill be equally productive on the field this season — although it's fair to question if Hill, who has dropped approximately 15 pounds in an effort to gain some juice as he enters the later chapters of his career, will see the same 170+ target volume this year as he was accustomed to in his first two seasons with the Dolphins. 

Even if he doesn't, at least the Dolphins can prep game plans knowing that the Cheetah is as fast as ever. That track speed should carry over to the gridiron just fine.